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11 August 2015

Women who bucked tradition...

... Nellie Bly and Calamity Jane

By
Dan Jorgensen

Calamity Jane 1890's

While
they led intensely different lives, the parallel paths followed by Nellie Bly
and Calamity Jane provide interesting perspectives on how women tackled previously
untested roles to open doors and pave the way for generations of women who
followed.

Nellie Circa 1890

In my
novel And The Wind Whispered, Nellie Bly,
perhaps the greatest investigative reporter who ever lived, arrives in 1894 Hot
Springs in the southern Black Hills ready to “be a tourist” in a region being
touted as “The new Baden, Baden. A
genteel land of relaxation, spas and breathtaking scenery.” While that description was justified, it’s
remarkable that less than 100 miles away, Calamity Jane was holding court as
“Queen of Deadwood,” one of the Old West’s wildest and “least accommodating” communities.

The
intersection of this newfound “tourist respectability” with the ongoing “Wild
West” owes something to both of these remarkable women, whose lives paralleled
but rarely intersected as each was establishing herself in historical lore.

Born
Elizabeth Jane Cochran, “Nellie” built her reputation as the most renowned
undercover and daredevil reporter of her time.
Her impact on what had been considered the domain of men lasts
until this day. She was a dynamo in a small frame. Her slight build, short-cropped hair and thin
waist made her appear fragile, but it masked a stubbornness and will of iron
that made her a formidable force.

Nellie 1894

Nellie
took her pen name to protect her identity, particularly since she was going
into so many dangerous situations where the discovery of who she really was
could lead to injury or death. She
reported on terrible working conditions from factories to the burlesque stage,
posed as an insane woman to unmask the horrors of infamous Blackwell’s Island
Sanatorium, and traveled alone around the world to beat a mythical record from
Jules Verne’s famous book.

To
avoid discovery, cover her tracks and protect her sources, she would write on tiny pieces of paper and conceal them
inside special pockets sewn inside her underwear. To defend herself and make quick getaways,
she became an accomplished marksman and horseback
rider. She memorized conversations and
transcribed them at night in her hotel room, sending coded reports to her
editors via the telegraph wire. Generations of investigative reporters have emulated her style,
including Truman Capote, who used it for his interviews while writing In Cold Blood.

Traveling
alone, Nellie reported from far-reaching sites, including parts of the Wild West
previously not visited by “respectable” women; towns like Deadwood. “A free American girl … can travel anywhere
and do anything,” she wrote. And women
everywhere, especially younger women and girls, believed her completely and
came by the droves to permanently change those communities.

She simultaneously
brought new excitement to journalism and shed light on sexist ideologies
permeating Society. Nellie Bly became a
household synonym for journalistic excellence. So, when she left journalism to
marry, Arthur Brisbane, the managing editor of The New York World, lamented:
“Reporting has suffered a great loss.
Nellie Bly’s the best reporter in the world. Not the best female reporter, simply the
best.”

While
Nellie was writing her way to fame, Calamity Jane – born Martha Jane Canary – was
creating her own larger than life persona as a rough-riding, hard-drinking,
hard-smoking, “champion swearer of the Black Hills,” working as a muleskinner,
bullwhacker, and scout for the Army. Her
title of “champion swearer” was not just assigned – she actually won it in a
competition.

Calamity Jane 1890's

By
1894 she was so notorious that two Black Hills Creeks and a Peak had been named
in her honor. (Fortunately, Calamity
Peak did not lend itself to good carving, so Mount Calamity never came to
be).

Calamity came to the Black Hills as
a scout for a wagon train that included Wild Bill Hickok, and by the time they
reached Deadwood they were nearly inseparable until his murder. Dressed in leather with a powerful voice and
“nasty saloon habits,” she quickly took center stage, even in that rough and
ready boomtown.

But Calamity Jane was an
enigma. Fearless, mean and nasty when
the need arose, she also was held in highest regard for her kindness and gentle
care of the poor or injured. She
literally gave her last dime to help the needy, and during the 1878 smallpox
epidemic spent weeks nursing the sick and dying – without fear or compensation.

Opponents said she was “just another
harlot, no different from 90 percent of the other Deadwood prostitutes – only
uglier and meaner” – but she could exude remarkable charm and beauty when she
chose to bathe and “get fixed up.”

Martha Jane became Calamity
beginning at age 12 after her parents’ death. While doing men’s jobs dressed as a man, she also found prostitution to
be a lucrative trade. Being both
charming and a fierce fighter when threatened, she told some men that while sex
was on the table, “You’re courting
calamity if you mess with me.” Thus,
perhaps, the genesis for her nickname.

She rode as a scout at age 23,
traveled to the gold fields at age 25, and personally helped foster her own reputation
by writing a widely shared autobiography. She also encouraged dime novelists to write sordid tales of her wild
sex affairs with some of the most notorious desperados of the day.

By
1895, when Nellie was leaving the limelight to run her husband’s business,
Calamity was expanding her fame. She joined
Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show and toured America. Wherever she performed, she also sold copies
of her greatly exaggerated autobiography, further spreading her story.

But her hard living caught up with
her and she died at age 51, exactly 27 years to the day that Wild Bill was shot
to death in a Deadwood saloon. Whether
loved or despised, she always drew a crowd, and a mile-long procession followed
her hearse to Deadwood’s Boot Hill – where she lies buried side-by-side
with Wild Bill.

Wild Bill 1896

Meanwhile, after a 20-year sojourn, Nellie
returned to journalism and, true to form, became the first female war
correspondent, covering World War I and achieving more reporting fame. Exposed to the ravages of war, she developed
lung problems and died of pneumonia in 1922 at age 57. She is buried in New York City, and despite
her popularity, only three people came to her funeral.

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